The Saint (1962-1965)
Starring Roger Moore
1962 - BLACK AND WHITE
- The Talented Husband, screenplay by Jack Saunders
- The Latin Touch, screenplay by Gerald Kelsey and Dick Sharples
- The Careful Terrorist, screenplay by Gerald Kelsey and Dick Sharples
- The Covetous Head Man, screenplay by John Roddick
- The Loaded Tourist, screenplay by Richard Harris
- The Pearls Of Peace, screenplay by Richard Harris
- The Element of Doubt, screenplay by Norman Borisoff
- The Arrow of God, screenplay by Julian Bond
- The Effete Angler, screenplay by Norman Borisoff
- The Golden Journey, screenplay by Lewis Davidson
- The Man who was Lucky, screenplay by John Gilling
- The Charitable Countess, screenplay by Gerald Kelsey and Dick Sharples
1963 - BLACK AND WHITE
- The Romantic Matron, screenplay by Larry Forrester
- The Invisible Millionairess, screenplay by Kenneth Hayles
- The Gentle Ladies, screenplay by John Graeme
- The Ever loving Spouse, screenplay by Norman Borisoff
- The Saint sees it Through, screenplay by Ian Martin
- The Fellow Traveller, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- Starring the Saint, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- Judith, screenplay by Leonard Grahame
- Teresa, screenplay by John Kruse
- The Elusive Ellshaw, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- Marcia, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The Work of Art, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- Iris, screenplay by Bill Strutton
- The King of the Beggars, screenplay by John Gilling
- The Rough Diamonds, screenplay by Bill Strutton
- The Saint plays with Fire, screenplay by John Kruse
- The Benevolent Burglary, screenplay by Larry Forrester
- The Bunco Artists, screenplay by Lewis Davidson
1964 - BLACK AND WHITE
- The well meaning Mayor, screenplay by Robert Stewart
- The Sporting Chance, screenplay by John Kruse
- The Wonderful War, screenplay by John Graeme
- The Noble Sports Woman, screenplay by John Graeme
- Luella, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The Lawless Lady, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The Good Medicine, screenplay by Norman Borisoff
- The High Fence, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- Sophia, screenplay by Robert Stewart
- The Miracle Tea Party, screenplay by Paddy Manning O'Brine
- Lida, screenplay by Terry Nation
- Jeannine, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Scorpion, screenplay by Paul Erickson
- The Revolution Racket, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Saint Steps In, screenplay by John Kruse
- The Loving Brothers, screenplay by John Graeme
- The Man who liked Toys, screenplay by Basil Dawson
- The Death Penalty, screenplay by Ian Stuart Black
- The Imprudent Politician, screenplay by Norman Hudis
- The Hi-jackers, screenplay by Paul Erickson
- The Unkind Philanthropist, screenplay by Marcus Demain
1965 - BLACK AND WHITE
- The Damsel in Distress, screenplay by Paul Erickson
- The Contract, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Set-Up, screenplay by Paddy Manning O'Brine
- The Inescapable World, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Rhine Maiden, screenplay by Brian Degas
- The Golden Frog, screenplay by Michael Cramoy
- The Sign of the Claw, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Frightened Inn-Keeper, screenplay by Norman Hudis
- Sibao, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Crime of the Century, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Happy Suicide, screenplay by Brian Degas
- The Chequered Flag, screenplay by Norman Hudis
- The Crooked Ring, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The Abductors, screenplay by Brian Degas
- The Smart Detective, screenplay by Michael Cramoy
- The Persistent Parasite, screenplay by Norman Hudis
- The Man Who Could Not Die, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Saint Bids Diamonds, screenplay by Pat Lasky and Jesse Lasky Jr.
The Saint (1966-1969)
Starring Roger Moore
- Queen's Ransom, screenplay by Leigh Vance
- The House on Dragon's Rock, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The Russian Prisoner, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The Reluctant Revolution, screenplay by John Stanton
- The Helpful Pirate, screenplay by Roy Russell
- The Convenient Monster, screenplay by Terrence Feely
- The Angel's Eye, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The Man Who Gambled With Life, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The Man Who Liked Lions, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin (orginal story by Douglas Enfar)
- The Better Mousetrap, screenplay by Leigh Vance
- Little Girl Lost, screenplay by Leigh Vance
- Paper Chase, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin.
- Flight Plan, screenplay by Alfred Shaughnessy and Anthony Squire
- Escape Route, screenplay by Michael Winder
- The Persistent Patriots, screenplay by Michael Pertwee
- The Fast Women, screenplay by Leigh Vance
- The Death Game, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin (story by John Kruse)
- The Art Collectors, screenplay by Michael Pertwee
- To Kill a Saint, screenplay by Michael Winder
- The Counterfeit Countess, screenplay by Philip Broadley
- Interlude in Venice, screenplay by Paddy Manning O'Brine
- Simon and Delilah, screenplay by C. Scott Forbes
- Island of Chance, screenplay by Leigh Vance
- The Gadget Lovers, screenplay by John Kruse
- Double in Diamonds, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin (story by Donald Ford and Derek Ford)
- The Power Artist, screenplay by John Kruse
- When Spring is Sprung, screenplay by Michael Pertwee
- Legacy for the Saint
1969 - COLOuR
- The Master Plan, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The People Importers, screenplay by Donald James
- The Scales of Justice, screenplay by Robert Holmes
- Where the Money is, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Ex-King of Diamonds, screenplay by John Kruse
- Vendetta for the Saint, part 1, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin and JohnKruse
- Vendetta for the Saint, part 2, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin and JohnKruse
- The Portrait of Brenda, screenplay by Harry W. Junkin
- The World Beater, screenplay by Donald James
- Invitation to Danger, screenplay by Terry Nation
- The Best Laid Schemes, screenplay by Joseph Morhaim and A. SandfordWolf
- Locate and Destroy, screenplay by John Stanton
The Return of The Saint (1978-1979)
Starring Ian Ogilvy
In the late 1970's ITC decided to renew the Saint and continue the series. Robert Baker proposed a "Son of the Saint" solution to the age problem, with Roger Moore appearing in various episodes as the new Saint's father. This was scrapped, and Ian Ogilvy took over the halo for 24 episodes as Simon Templar. The show featured very high-quality production values, and was shot on location all over the world. People still saw the Saint as Roger Moore, and while some were beginning to accept Ian Ogilvy in the role, the show was cut short before he had a chance to turn the majority to his rendition.
The Saint in Manhattan (1987)
Starring Andrew Clarke
Robert Baker still believed in the Saint, and decided to give it another go with Australian Andrew Clarke in the lead role. He teamed with D.L. Taffner Ltd., to produce a one-hour pilot episode that aired on CBS. The show did not make the fall schedule; instead, CBS decided to show it and have viewers call in and vote to put it on the schedule. About 44,000 people called in, with over 40,000 of them voting in favor of the show. These numbers did not sway CBS, especially since the show did not fair well against whatever was playing on the other two networks that night, and it declined to purchase any future episodes.
The Saint (1989)
Starring Simon Dutton
In 1989 the Saint was once again welcomed back to television in six 2-hour movies featuring Simon Dutton as Simon Templar, alias the Saint. D.L. Taffner Ltd., produced the episodes as part of The Mystery Wheel of Adventure, a series of ten new made-for-TV movies.
Bob Baker was involved as a consultant to the series, but Charteris' expertise was not utilized and his criticisms were ignored.
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